20 octubre 2014

Yondelis en el " Journal Of Thoracic Oncology " : Assessing the Multimodal Management of Advanced Solitary Fibrous Tumors of the Pleura in a Routine Practice Setting .

Copyright (C) 2014 by the European Lung Cancer Conference and the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer.

Bylicki, Olivier; Rouviere, Damien; Cassier, Philippe; Chalabreysse, Lara; Levard, Alice; Maury, Jean-Michel; Margery, Jacques; Blay, Jean-Yves; Mazieres, Julien; Girard, Nicolas .

Abstract

Background:


Solitary Fibrous Tumors of the Pleura (SFTP) refer as to a heterogeneous group of mesenchymal malignancies with various anatomic and histology features. Upfront surgical resection is the standard approach, but recurrences may be aggressive and difficult to treat.

The most widely accepted staging system has been proposed by De Perrot et al. Because SFTPs are rare, evidence to support a role for perioperative chemotherapy is scarce. Likewise, the predictive or prognostic relevance of the De Perrot system may be questioned.



Methods:

Multicenter retrospective study of patients with histologically-proven SFTP with complete follow-up from surgical diagnostic to tumor recurrence and death.

RESULTS:

68 patients were included. Tumor stage was 0/I for 29 (43%) patients, II for 23 (34%) patients, III for 7 (10%) patients, and IV for 9 (13%) patients. Post-operative chemotherapy was given to 7 patients, mostly with stage III/IV SFTP, mostly consisting of doxorubicin-based regimen. Recurrence rate and median relapse-free survival after surgery were 3%, 52%, 71%, and 80% (p < 0.001), and 107, 70, 29, 11 months (p < 0.001) for stage 0/I, II, III, and IV tumors, respectively.
At time of tumor recurrence, 14 patients received exclusive chemotherapy. Highest disease control rates were observed with Trabectedin, and Gemcitabine-Dacarbazine combination.

CONCLUSION:

Our study confirms the prognostic value of the De Perrot staging system, as well as its possible predictive value for perioperative chemotherapy decision-making, while the efficacy of currently available regimens to significantly reduce the risk of tumor recurrence remains questionable.
Trabectedin may be of interest for recurrent tumors.